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The Museum’s Collections document the fate of Holocaust victims, survivors, rescuers, liberators, and others through artifacts, documents, photos, films, books, personal stories, and more. Search below to view digital records and find material that you can access at our library and at the Shapell Center.

Painting

Object | Accession Number: 2015.448.82

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

The painting was acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2015.

Funding Note

The acquisition of this artifact was made possible by the Crown Family.

Record last modified: 2018-10-24 14:08:28
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn531578

Also in This Collection

The collection consist of one poster issued by the French Government Seine-et-Oise department in 1941, 112 paintings created by Zenek Maor, a Holocaust survivor originally from Poland, the Elkan family papers, from 1941-1946, and a typed manuscript with a list of Polish refugees from the immediate postwar period.

Poster issued by Seine-et-Oise département authorities in France declaring a Jewish community census. Jews are obliged to declare all real estate properties which they own, according to an official order from July 31, 1941.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Part of a collection of paintings: primarily gouache, created by Holocaust survivor Zenek Maor, documenting his experiences during the Holocaust and his life in Israel; Maor (born Moskowicz) was born in Wloclawek, Poland in 1923. His family fled to Warsaw, where they were forced into the ghetto. From there he was sent to a forced labor camp to build a railway line, before being transferred to Auschwitz with his brother Heniek. There they were assigned to a work detail in the Janinagrube coal mine. On January 17, 1945, Zenek and Heniek were forced on a death march towards Germany. After Zenek's liberation by the Red Army, he returned to Wloclawek to initially discover he was the only family member to return. Heniek and Zenek went to Bavaria, and Heniek eventually immigrated to the United States. Zenek immigrated to Israel in 1947, and married Hungarian survivor Lilli. They lived at Kibbutz Yad Mordecai and eventually moved to Haifa; created in 2005.

Contains documents that trace the experiences of several members of the Elkan family, originally of Eschweiler, Germany, but residents in the Netherlands, durng the German occupation of the latter country in World War II. Includes identification documents for Hilde Elkan, 1941-1942; a card attesting that Hilde Elkan had paid dues to the social work department of the Jewish Council of Amsterdam, 1941; and a letter attesting that Hilde Elkan never collaborated with the occupiers and that her family, as Jews, were persecuted during the occupation, 1946. Also conatins a letter from Jenny Elkan Mimetz, sent to the family of Liesje van de Schoor, from the Vught internment camp at s'Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands, undated, circa 1943; and tracing service correspondence addressed to Helga Elkan Brady, of Southampton, England, in 1945-1946, concerning the fates of Jenny Mimetz and her husband, Frits. The letters confirm that they were deported from Vught to Westerbork, and then to Sobibor in July 1943, and presumed to have perished there.

Typescript, bound, 151 pages, containing the names of Polish Jews who arrived in Hungary at the conclusion of World War II, and who were registered by the Committee to Aid Deported Jews (of Polish citizenry) in Hungary, between April and November 1945. The list contains the names, in alphabetic order by last name, and for each individual, the date and place of birth, place of residence (prior to deportation), and other characteristics, such as occupation or name of spouse or parents. Created by the committee in Budapest, November 1945.

Learn about over 1,000 camps and ghettos in Volume I and II of this encyclopedia, which are available as a free PDF download. This reference provides text, photographs, charts, maps, and extensive indexes.